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・ Nicholas Shaxson
・ Nicholas Shaxton
・ Nicholas Sheehy
・ Nicholas Shehadie
・ Nicholas Shepherd-Barron
・ Nicholas Sheppard
・ Nicholas Sheran
・ Nicholas Sheran Park
・ Nicholas Sickles
・ Nicholas Sillitoe
・ Nicholas Simons
・ Nicholas Sims-Williams
・ Nicholas Sinclair
・ Nicholas Sinclair (disambiguation)
・ Nicholas Size
Nicholas Skeres
・ Nicholas Skerrett
・ Nicholas Slake
・ Nicholas Slanning
・ Nicholas Slanning (disambiguation)
・ Nicholas Smith
・ Nicholas Smith (actor)
・ Nicholas Smith (MP)
・ Nicholas Snell
・ Nicholas Snell (died 1577)
・ Nicholas Snowman
・ Nicholas Soames
・ Nicholas Solovioff
・ Nicholas Soussanin
・ Nicholas Spaeth


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Nicholas Skeres : ウィキペディア英語版
Nicholas Skeres
Nicholas Skeres (March 1563 - c. 1601) was an Elizabethan con-man and government informer—i.e. a "professional deceiver"—and one of the three "gentlemen" who were with the poet and playwright Christopher Marlowe when he was killed in Deptford in May 1593. Together with another of the men there, Robert Poley, he had played a part in the discovery of the Babington plot against the life of the Queen in 1586, and at the time of Marlowe's death was engaged in a money-lending swindle with the third of them, Marlowe's reported killer Ingram Frizer.
==Early life==
Skeres was born the second son of a merchant tailor, Nicholas Skeres senior, in March 1563, probably in the family's parish of All-Hallows-the-Less, near London Bridge. His father died when he was only three years old, however, leaving each of his two sons and his widow a third of his estate. In fact this included land in Yorkshire, the Skeres or Skyeres family having once lived at Skyeres Hall near Wentworth.
Despite his father's occupation, neither he nor his brother went to the Merchant Taylors' School, although according to the School's register, their cousin Ralph Skeres junior did attend in 1564. On the other hand, he does seem to have been a law student at Furnival's Inn, one of the Inns of Chancery, which would imply a reasonable level of education, and the relationships he apparently established with several well-known writers including Marlowe, would suggest it too.
On 7 July 1585, writing to Lord Burghley, William Fleetwood mentioned a "Nicholas Skeeres" among a number of "maisterles men & cut-purses, whose practice is to robbe Gentlemen's chambers and Artificers' shoppes in and about London". However, as Charles Nicholl argues, it seems unlikely that such a man would be employed in important government business as this Nicholas Skeres appears to have been a year later.

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